Journal article

The affective commitment of academics in a university in Botswana


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Publication Details

Author list: Nkhukhu-Orlando, Esther; Brown, Byron; Wilson, Debra Rose; Forcheh, Ntonghanwah; Linn, James G.; Fako, Thabo T.

Publication year: 2019

Volume number: 11

Issue number: 2

Start page: 12

End page: 19

Number of pages: 8



Affective commitment remains an essential factor in key outcomes such as work performance and productivity, and has been shown to have the strongest positive relation with positive work behaviours when compared with normative commitment and continuance commitment. Using a sample of 164 academic employees at the University of Botswana, this study assessed the extent to which they had affective commitment to the organization. We also investigated factors that are associated with affective commitment and those that predict affective commitment of academic employees. The study found that only 34.1% of academic employees sampled had affective commitment. Logistic regression analyses identified three predictors of affective commitment among academic employees. They are satisfaction with management, contribution to policy making, and responding to emails. While some researchers have found that associations between affective commitment and demographic variables were generally low or weak, this study found no significant associations between demographic factors and affective commitment.


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Last updated on 2022-29-11 at 11:50